I'd say adding Searle's 'Social Construction of Reality' or the later 'Making the Social World' would nicely complement these two - if you are not familiar with them already.
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Let me add why: because he so nicely argues (especially in the earlier book) that a meaningful notion of socially constructed reality only makes sense given a realism about non-socially constructed reality, and that we can have epistemically objective knowledge about both.
End of conversation
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Wait, are these Boghossians not brothers? They look so similar...
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Unfortunately, "Fear of Knowledge" buys into the underlying assumption that led to relativism and constructivism in the first place. It tries to argue that knowledge can indeed be *justified*. But it can't. And that's why relativism took over. Everyone needs to read more Popper
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Do they make reeses pieces if you sLAM them together?
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don't put them together in your backpack, they'll set each other on fire.
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